Semi-Supervillains rock far from Duquesne

Courtesy of Sound Scene Express When they aren’t in class at Duquesne, The Semi-Supervillains are playing shows around Pittsburgh and abroad. The band recently released a new EP and played six showcase performances at this year’s SXSW in Austin, Texas.

By Julian Routh | Editor in Chief

Courtesy of Sound Scene Express When they aren’t in class at Duquesne, The Semi-Supervillains are playing shows around Pittsburgh and abroad. The band recently released a new EP and played six showcase performances at this year’s SXSW in Austin, Texas.
Courtesy of Sound Scene Express
When they aren’t in class at Duquesne, The Semi-Supervillains are playing shows around Pittsburgh and abroad. The band recently released a new EP and played six showcase performances at this year’s SXSW in Austin, Texas.

Of the dozens of bands that have formed in the dorms of Duquesne, not many can say they’ve had success quite like The Semi-Supervillains.

Nor can they say they’ve partied with Wyclef Jean in a gated mansion on the Colorado River in Austin, rocked SXSW without a record label or had their songs played on Pittsburgh Pirates telecasts.

But if anyone knows how to navigate the glum prospects of the indie music industry, it’s Vinnie Longhi, sixth-year Duquesne pharmacy major by day and Semi-Supervillains frontman by night.

“Being a working class musician, it’s tough,” Longhi said. “It’s hard to make money anymore. But anything you do full time, it can get monotonous. I’d like to do 20 hours a week as a pharmacist, 20 hours as a musician, you know?”

It’s worked so far for the Semi-Supervillains. The balance between music and school is something they’ve all had to deal with; keyboard player Forrest Mance is one of Longhi’s pharmacy classmates, bassist John Pennacchio is a second-year med student at West Virginia University, drummer Cory Caruso graduated in 2014 from Duquesne and guitarist Nick Longhi is at WVU for biology.

As a band, they’ve released two full length EPs, “Tricks” in 2013 and “Here Comes Trouble” in 2015, as well as a collection of acoustic renditions, “Southwest,” that was unveiled last Friday. They’ve toured regionally and internationally, including stops in Toronto, Ottawa and Montreal. And they’ve racked up quite a few accolades, winning the 2014 PennRock Scholarship, 2014 Weirton Band Blast and a chance to play live on 102.5 WDVE Coffeehouse with Randy Baumann.

But nothing was as rewarding to the band as the opportunity to head down to Texas for SXSW, a weeklong festival of music, film, interactive media and innovation conferences.

The band brought its high energy, new wave garage rock style to six different showcases around Austin, including Jam in the Van at the GQ Magazine Artist House.

“Playing in Pittsburgh, it’s sometimes small peanuts,” Longhi said. “At SXSW, we were playing showcases for Ernie Ball guitar strings or GQ. And it’s like, you’re walking down the street with your guitar in Austin, you talk to somebody, and they’re a record producer in Los Angeles. You exchange business cards and hope someday they might call you.”

The Semi-Supervillains are currently shopping record labels and plugging their new EP. “Southwest,” a stripped-down compilation of their songs that was recorded by Longhi and Mance in Georgetown, Texas, is an attempt to show the band’s versatility.

“All eyes are on you after SXSW, and you need to do something that proves you’re relevant,” Longhi said. “A lot of the big record labels want you to prove you can release music consistently.”

“Southwest” is available for download on the band’s Bandcamp website. They are playing at Arsenal Lanes in Lawrenceville on May 4 and the Rex Theater in South Side on May 7.